From: albe albo <richter1956@yahoo.com>

Date: December 21, 2008 8:02:32 AM MST

To: Astro_IIDC@yahoogroups.com

Subject: Re: [Astro_IIDC] New file uploaded to Astro_IIDC-Puzzling Problem


Wow Milton,

where are you now?

Among the wolves?


2.2 kilobytes per second....

Try not to watch too many Hi-Res movies with such wideband.


Scavenging into my movie database i found 2 copernicus with a very similar illumination but different view angle.

I assembled this red-cyan anaglyph that seems to show some interesting 3D features.

Even if the image is not heavy to download I don't think that among the wolves you have the red/cyan glasses but i hope that someone else could watch it with the glasses.


TTYL

Alberto



From: Milton Aupperle <milton@outcastsoft.com>

To: Astro_IIDC@yahoogroups.com

Sent: Friday, December 19, 2008 4:23:36 PM

Subject: Re: [Astro_IIDC] New file uploaded to Astro_IIDC-Puzzling Problem


Hi Alberto;


I'll see if I can find it when I get back from vacation in January. I'm at the remote location with 2.2 kilobytes per second transfer rates (maximum), so it takes a very long time to get stuff uploaded. And I don't have the backup DVD's with the movies here either.


TTYL..


Milton Aupperle


On 19-Dec-08, at 3:44 AM, albe albo wrote:

I suspect something about  air "blades" flowing almost parallels each other, making a kind of regular shifting (like the refractions caused by a pile of different moving glasses ).

Now that i understood them i'm very happy that i could recover many of the affected images.


Milton would you send to me for an experiment  a sample of your double image? (with no deconvolution is better)?

I'd like to try the treatment in order to check if it is the same kind of problem and if  they may be recovered too.

Who knows...you could add a new function to AIIDC (LOL) setting directly the doubling correction in a transparent way for the final user (he/she won't know what the software is doing so he/she won't use photoshop).


TTYL

Alberto




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